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Smart, No. 22 Oklahoma State beat Texas 72-59

By JIM VERTUNO, AP Sports WriterSaturday, Feb 9, 2013

AUSTIN, Texas (AP)—Oklahoma State freshman Marcus Smart walked onto a
familiar court and left two hours later with a familiar result and a smile.

Smart won two high school state championships in the University of Texas’
Frank Erwin Center. He returned for the first time Saturday to score 23 points,
powering the 22nd-ranked Cowboys to their fifth straight win, 72-59 over the
Longhorns.

“I have a great feeling for this gym,” Smart said. “If felt great coming
back.”

Markel Brown added 17 points and Le’Bryan Nash had 14 points and nine
rebounds for the Cowboys (17-5, 7-3 Big 12), who sputtered offensively for long
stretches but were still able to shrug off a Texas team mired it its worst
season in 15 years under coach Rick Barnes.

Cowboys coach Travis Ford had worried his team might be tired after
emotional wins over Kansas and Baylor and sought to relieve the pressure by
having his team play a game of whiffle ball on Thursday.

The result was a relaxed team, maybe a little too relaxed at times, that
could overcome its own miscues to win.

Ioannis Papapetrou scored 15 points to lead Texas (10-13, 2-8). The
Longhorns shot 1 of 18 from 3-point range and were just 12 of 21 from the free
throw line.

Texas’ leading scorer this season, Sheldon McClellan, didn’t score in the
first half and finished with four points.

“They came in here fearless and really took it from us,” Papapetrou said.
“We didn’t show up. We’re embarrassed. More than frustrated, we’re
embarrassed.”

Saturday marked the end of the 23-game NCAA suspension for Texas guard Myck
Kabongo, who is expected to play the rest of the season.

Texas has clearly been hampered by his absence, which has forced the point
guard duties to freshman Javan Felix, who had eight turnovers and one assist
against the Cowboys.

Barnes called it Felix’s “worst game” of the season and said Kabongo will
start Wednesday night against Iowa State.

“There will be a different team on the court,” Barnes said. “No doubt he
has to start.”

Despite its stumbles, Texas has still been able to use tough defense to
force teams to grind out possessions looking for good shots. The Longhorns held
Oklahoma State to 32 percent shooting in the first half.

Smart muscled his way to 11 points in the first half then dismantled Texas
in the opening minutes of the second as the Cowboys asserted control.

A steal led to a fast break dunk before two free throws and a 3-pointer
helped put the Cowboys ahead 42-30. Even when Texas could get physical with the
Cowboys, Smart used his muscular frame to force his way past defenders for an
easy floater in the lane, or step out for one of his three 3-pointers.

Brown scored six straight points in a 60-second burst that all but settled
the game for the Cowboys. A dunk off a miss and a layup off a nifty pass under
the basket from Smart put the Cowboys up by 14 points with about 8 minutes to
play.

“It was a good win on the road. We respect Texas so much,” Nash said. “We
just keep trying to climb that ladder. We have great team chemistry.”